Honours and awards to Harold Pinter lists (in chronological order)
honours, awards, prizes, and honorary degrees received by English playwright
Harold Pinter (1930–2008), which often acknowledge his international importance and his reach beyond national and regional boundaries.
Background
Pinter declined a British
knighthood in 1996, when it was offered to him on behalf of
Queen Elizabeth II by British Prime Minister
John Major, then leader of the
Conservative Party.[1] Despite his declining it, many in the
media (both in the UK and elsewhere) still refer erroneously to Pinter as "Sir Harold Pinter".[2][3]
He was awarded academic
honorary degrees at the
University of Leeds, in April 2007 (in person), at which its Humanities faculty processed in full academic garb solely to present the honorary doctorate to Pinter;[4] at the
University of Kragujevac, in
Serbia;[5] and at the
University of Cambridge, in June 2008 (both of the latter in absentia).[6] In December 2007, the
British Library announced that it had acquired his literary archive for over
£1.1 million (approx. US$2.24 million) on behalf of the
British nation.[2]
After having accepted the honorary presidency of the
Central School of Speech and Drama, a constituent college of the
University of London, in October 2008, he received an honorary fellowship during its honorary degree ceremony, also in absentia, due to ill health, on 10 December 2008,[7][8] two weeks before his death from cancer on 24 December 2008.[9]
Harold Pinter started out as an actor in 1951. In 2005 he won the
Nobel Prize for Literature. In the intervening half-century he has been many things: playwright, screen-writer, director, poet and performer. But his greatest achievement has been to re-write the rules of drama. He has created poetry out of everyday speech with its pauses, hesitations and repetitions. He has constantly explored, like a theatrical
Proust, the pervasive power of memory. And, in a sequence of remarkable plays from The Room (1957) to Celebration (2000), he has demolished the idea of the omniscient author: instead of manipulating character to a chosen end, Pinter presents the evidence as he sees it and allows the spectator freedom of interpretation. But, although Pinter is a true theatrical poet, his work and life are filled with a moral rage against injustice. He is a political writer, not in the sense of endorsing a party ideology but in his assault on the abuse of human dignity and the mis-use of language by those in power. There are many other facets to Pinter: the
Cockney humourist, the skilled movie-writer, the heavyweight actor, the cricket-loving Englishman. But, if Pinter's plays are performed the world over, it is because they touch a universal chord. And what everyone recognises is that we live in a world of fear and anxiety briefly alleviated by memories of past happiness. Pinter speaks to audiences everywhere and to generations yet unborn; which makes him an ideal recipient of the Europe Theatre Prize.[17]
^"News and Events: Cambridge Honorary Degrees 2008". 27 February 2008. Archived from
the original on 3 May 2008. Retrieved 23 June 2008. Harold Pinter, playwright, actor and director (Doctor of Letters). ... Honorary Degrees [were] conferred at a special Congregation ... held in the Senate House on Monday 23 June. [Pinter did not attend the ceremony due to ill health.]
^Mark Taylor-Batty, comp.
"In Memoriam". Harold Pinter Society Webpages. The Harold Pinter Society and the
University of Leeds. Archived from
the original on 10 February 2009. Retrieved 1 January 2009. Harold Pinter - playwright, poet, actor, director, political activist - died on 24 December 2008, aged 78.
^"South Bank Prize for Craig David",
BBC News 25 January 2001, accessed 15 September 2007: "Harold Pinter - regarded by many as Britain's greatest living playwright - received the award for outstanding achievement." (Features photograph of
Harold Pinter receiving the award for "outstanding achievement in the arts.")
^Leslie Kane (2004).
"Introduction". The Art of Crime: The Plays and Film of Harold Pinter and David Mamet.
Psychology Press. p. 2.
Billington, Michael. Harold Pinter. 2nd ed. London: Faber and Faber, 2007.
ISBN978-0-571-23476-9 (13).
ISBN0-571-17103-6 (10). Print. (The official authorized biography.) [Updated ed. of The Life and Work of Harold Pinter 1996. London: Faber and Faber, 1997.]
"Harold Pinter: Awards" – Biography at HaroldPinter.org: The Official Website of the International Playwright Harold Pinter. (Through 2007; periodically updated.)